RE: [PATCH 1/2] dt-bindings: serial: rs485: add rs485-mux-gpios binding

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From: Lino Sanfilippo [mailto:LinoSanfilippo@xxxxxx]
Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2023 12:40 AM

Hi, 

> On 22.11.23 at 15:53, Lukas Wunner wrote:
>> On Mon, Nov 20, 2023 at 04:10:54PM +0100, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
>>> Some boards are capable of both rs232 and rs485, and control which
>>> external terminals are active via a gpio-controlled mux. Allow
>>> describing that gpio in DT so that the kernel can transparently handle
>>> the proper setting when the uart is switched between rs232 and rs485
>>> modes.
>>
>> Crescent CY Hsieh (+cc) is in parallel trying to add an RS-422 mode bit
>> to struct serial_rs485:
>>
>> https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231121095122.15948-1-crescentcy.hsieh@xxxxxxxx/
>>
> 
> That new flag was suggested by me instead of using SER_RS422_ENABLED, which
> would mostly be redundant to SER_RS485_ENABLED.
> I dont know if it is a good choice in the long term to handle both modes within
> the RS485 configuration. It would be cleaner to have an own RS422 structure with
> its own flags and properties. And until now the only flag that seems to make sense
> for both RS422 and RS485 is AFAICS SER_RS485_TERMINATE_BUS.
> 
> On the other hand the bus termination is at least a property that both modes have
> in common. And handling RS422 in its own structure would require another ioctl
> to set and get the the RS422 settings.
> 
> But maybe there are more or better possibilities to handle RS4822 support. I would like to
> hear other ideas.
> 
> 
> 
>> I don't know whether that makes sense at all (I had thought RS-422 is
>> the same as RS-485 with full-duplex, i.e. SER_RS485_ENABLED plus
>> SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX)

With RS-485 full duplex, SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX makes no sense to me.
See below.

>>
>> But if that patch gets accepted, we'd have *three* different modes:
>> RS-232, RS-485, RS-422.
> 
> Actually we would have four (as Brenda already wrote,
> see https://lore.kernel.org/all/c6ea912f-d5ab-4761-813d-3b6b6be141cb@xxxxxx/),
> and with the propose SER_RS485_MODE_RS422 flag these modes would be used like
> 
> RS-232:                       rs485->flags = 0
> RS-422:                       rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED|SER_RS485_MODE_RS422
> RS-485 (2-wire half-duplex):  rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED
> RS-485 (4-wire full-duplex):  rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED|SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX

In my point of view there are also two different modes for the RS-485 2-wire
half-duplex bus depending on the flag SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX.
- SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX is not set: The device doesn't see the bus during sending
                                     (RX is off during sending). 
- SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX is set:     The device see want is on bus during sending
                                     (RX is also on during sending), so you can
                                     see your transmission and also if another bus
                                     device is transmitting at the same time.

On RS-485 4-wire TX and RX are separated by wires. So the definition of
SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX above makes no sense, because you can receive all the time
without worrying about TX. On the software side RS-485 4-wire full duplex it behaves
like RS-232. So we don't need transceiver controlling by the RTS pin.

Basically for me the SER_RS485_ENABLED flag is to enable the RTS control for the
transceiver. Maybe on software side we can distinguish between half and full duplex
mode and whether RX is enabled during sending by the flag SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX:
RS-232:                          rs485->flags = 0
RS-422 / RS-485 (4-wire):        rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED|SER_RS485_MODE_FULL_DUPLEX
RS-485 (2-wire NO RX_DURING_TX): rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED|SER_RS485_MODE_HALF_DUPLEX
RS-485 (2-wire RX_DURING_TX):    rs485->flags = SER_RS485_ENABLED|SER_RS485_MODE_HALF_DUPLEX|SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX

SER_RS485_MODE_FULL_DUPLEX and SER_RS485_MODE_HALF_DUPLEX can be defined at the
same bit. If SER_RS485_MODE_HALF_DUPLEX will be defined as 0 it breaks nothing.
With SER_RS485_MODE_FULL_DUPLEX, the RTS pin does not need to be controlled.

> 
>>  A single GPIO seems insufficient to handle that.
> 
> GPIOs for RS485 is another thing.
> 
> I mean, currently we have a GPIO for RS485 termination (I introduced it with commit
> 44b27aec9d9680875).
> Christoph introduced support for a rx-during-tx GPIO (see commit 163f080eb717). Tomas
> intends
> to add a GPIO which enables RS485 if asserted
> (see https://lore.kernel.org/all/3Za.ZZs%7D.ndXI8CMee4.1bN6eQ@xxxxxxxxx/) and with Rasmus
> patches
> we are about to add a MUX-GPIO which is to be asserted if RS485 is enabled.
> 
> I wonder where this will end and if we really have to support every possible GPIO
> in the serial core.

I think the GPIOs reflect the flag states and are meaningful:
- SER_RS485_TERMINATE_BUS: Switch bus termination on/off by GPIO
- SER_RS485_RX_DURING_TX:  Used to stop RX during TX in hardware by GPIO (for 2-wire)
- SER_RS485_ENABLED:       Muxing between RS-232 and RS-485 by GPIO

Switching RS-485 on during boot could also be handled by a devicetree overlay. Evaluate the
GPIO and load a DTO accordingly before booting.


Regards
Christoph




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